552:), and it also contains unflattering information about Sharif Abu Ja'far, who Ibn al-Banna held in extremely high regard. Most likely, Ibn al-Banna used the diary as a personal notebook for writing down anything he thought was important or interesting, and then later selectively draw upon those notes for material he did intend to publish. Its private nature makes the diary a more reliable source for the events it covers and also "reveals the temperament of the author, his personality, his prejudices, more vividly and more accurately than the stereotyped accounts given in the biographical devoted to him."
123:(374-460 AH) and had at least one son with her: Abu Nasr Muhammad ibn al-Hasan ibn al-Banna (434-510 AH), who was the oldest of his sons. He had two other sons: Abu Ghalib Ahmad (445-527 AH) and Abu Abdallah Yahya (453-531 AH); they both went on to become teachers themselves and were among Ibn al-Jawzi's tutors.
536:, a hadith scholar who had studied under Ibn al-Jawzi. Al-Maqdisi is known to have travelled to Baghdad shortly before Ibn al-Jawzi's death in 1201, and it may have been during this trip that he obtained the present fragment of Ibn al-Banna's diary. In any case, al-Maqdisi later endowed the diary fragment as
527:
Ibn al-Banna kept a diary, of which only part survives. The part that survives is part of the original manuscript itself, written in Ibn al-Banna's own messy handwriting. The language used is a streamlined version of Arabic suitable for quickly taking notes. The diary is valuable as a primary source
543:
At least two later writers used the diary as a source: Ibn al-Jawzi and Ibn Rajab. Ibn al-Jawzi appears to have had access to parts of the diary that are now lost, but not the current fragment, so it seems that the diary had become separated into multiple parts by then. On the other hand, Ibn Rajab
547:
Ibn al-Banna's diary was meant for his own personal use and was never meant to be published. As evidence of its private nature, it documents the internal dissension within the
Hanbali community that he would not have wanted to reveal to the general public (particularly the controversial case
531:
The diary's extant part covers a period of just over one year, from 3 August 1068 to 4 September 1069. When Ibn al-Banna began keeping a diary is not known, but he most likely kept writing in it until his death in 1079. The part that survives today eventually ended up in the possession of
575:. The letters themselves are not always clearly traced out; they often appear attached to each other where they should not be, and in many cases, they do not even appear. I spent a great amount of time merely on the deciphering of the text."
258:
280:
201:
Ibn al-Banna started teaching while his own teacher, Qadi Abu Ya'la, was still alive. He later came to lead two study circles: one in the Jami al-Qasr and the other at the Jami al-Mansur. The wealthy
Hanbali merchant
179:
334:
say he wrote 500 books, but this appears to have been a scribal error; this then got repeated in other later biographies of Ibn al-Banna. He wrote about a wide range of topics, including ethics, theology,
269:
232:
263:
252:
120:
294:. He was buried at the Cemetery of Bab Harb, with a large crowd in attendance. He was succeeded in his study circles at the Jami al-Qasr and the Jami al-Mansur by his eldest son Abu Nasr Muhammad.
544:
had access to the currently-known part of the diary, but not any others, so the part that survives today was probably in its present state by his time (i.e. none of it has been lost since then).
183:
275:
147:
247:
155:
454:
99:, he was one of the leading Islamic scholars of his day and a prolific author. Ibn al-Banna kept a diary during his lifetime, part of which survives today and is valuable as a
159:
163:
316:
135:
237:
214:
195:
171:
540:
property for the library of the Diya'iya madrasa he founded in
Damascus – a note written in the margin of the first page identifies it as property of the madrasa.
291:
151:
802:
210:
218:
465:
139:
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also hired him to teach at the Masjid Ibn Jarada in east
Baghdad, and he was also employed as a special tutor to members of Ibn Jarada's family.
143:
797:
191:
290:
471 AH). Funeral rites were performed at the Jami al-Qasr and the Jami al-Mansur, the two mosques where he had taught, led by
792:
126:
Ibn al-Banna studied under some of the most renowned
Islamic scholars in Baghdad. Many of his teachers also taught
119:); his family background is unknown. He appears to have lived in Baghdad his entire life. He married a daughter of
817:
807:
182:, who influenced him in his views on fiqh and theology. Other people who gave him training as a jurist were
822:
326:
571:, who translated the diary into English, described the handwriting this way: "There is a minimum of
812:
832:
203:
533:
127:
787:
782:
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Thanā' Aḥmad 'alā'sh-Shāfi'ī wa-thanā' alā'sh-Shāfi'ī 'alā Aḥmad, wa faḍā'il alā'sh-Shāfi'ī
351:, and dream interpretation. He also wrote some poetry, some verses of which are in Yaqut's
175:
272:(a freedman of Ibn Jarada who later taught hadith to both Ibn al-Jawzi and Ibn al-Sam'ani)
8:
827:
572:
528:
about 11th-century
Baghdad, particularly for events involving the Hanbali community.
96:
412:
311:
76:
568:
336:
100:
89:
Abū 'Alī al-Ḥasan ibn Aḥmad ibn 'Abd Allāh ibn al-Bannā' al-Baghdādī al-Ḥanbalī
23:
Abū 'Alī al-Ḥasan ibn Aḥmad ibn 'Abd Allāh ibn al-Bannā' al-Baghdādī al-Ḥanbalī
776:
751:
Bulletin of the School of
Oriental and African Studies, University of London
303:
222:
116:
49:
33:
746:
344:
321:
549:
348:
187:
104:
92:
747:"Autograph Diary of an Eleventh-Century Historian of Baghdād--I"
131:
287:
45:
537:
340:
167:
103:
about life in 11th-century
Baghdad. He was a member of the
209:
Among Ibn al-Banna's students were the Qur'anic scholars
194:, Abu'l-Fadl at-Tamimi, and Abu'l-Fadl's younger brother
138:(one of the most prominent Qur'an scholars of his day),
91:, was an 11th-century author, scholar, and diarist from
458:: the name given to Ibn al-Banna's diary by Ibn Rajab
302:
Ibn al-Banna was a prolific author. According to the
16:
11th-century author, scholar and diarist from
Baghdad
362:
Here is a partial list of his works, taken from the
259:
Abu's-Su'ud al-Mubarak ibn Talib al-Halawi al-Muqri
774:
178:. Ibn al-Banna later became an early student of
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738:
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286:He died at the age of 75 on 11 January 1079 (5
803:11th-century people from the Abbasid Caliphate
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592:
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281:Abu'l-Ma'ali Ahmad ibn Abi Tahir al-Madhari
115:Abu Ali ibn al-Banna was born in 1005 (396
330:he wrote "over 300". Some variants of the
186:, who was highly regarded by the caliphs
517:Mukhtaṣar gharīb al-ḥadīth li-Abī 'Ubaid
424:Ṣifat al-'ubbād fī't-tahajjud wa'l-aurād
320:, he wrote some 150 books; according to
264:Abu Bakr Ahmad ibn al-Khattab al-Hanbali
121:Abu Mansur Ali ibn al-Hasan al-Qirmisini
744:
502:Kitāb az-zakāh wa-'iqāb man faraṭa fīhā
429:Al-mu'āmalāt wa'ṣ-ṣabr 'alā'l-munāzalāt
381:Al-kāfī'l-muḥaddad fī sharḥ al-mujarrad
228:Others who studied under him include:
180:Qadi Abu Ya'la ibn al-Farra' al-Hanbali
775:
434:Ar-risāla fī's-sukūt wa-luzūm al-buyūt
419:Akhbār al-auliyā' wa'l-'ubbād bi-Makka
406:Sharḥ qaṣīdat Ibn Abī Dāwūd fī's-sunna
270:Abu Sa'id Safi ibn Abdallah al-Jammali
798:11th-century Muslim scholars of Islam
439:Salwat al-ḥazīn 'inda shiddat al-anīn
391:Nuzhat aṭ-Ṭālib fī tajrīd al-madhāhib
184:Qadi Abu Ali ibn Abi Musa al-Hashimi
512:Sharḥ al-īḍāḥ fī'n-naḥw li'l-Fārisī
233:Abu'l-Husayn ibn Abi Ya'la al-Farra
13:
401:Sharḥ kitāb al-Kirmānī fī't-ta'bīr
343:, sermons, history and biography,
253:Abu'l-Qasim ibn Abi Ya'la al-Farra
14:
844:
225:. He also taught his three sons.
276:Ja'far ibn al-Hasan al-Darzijani
562:
255:(eldest son of Qadi Abu Ya'la)
1:
582:
396:Adab al-'ālim wa'l-muta'allim
248:Abu'l-Qasim ibn as-Samarqandi
156:Abu Ali ibn Shihab al-'Ukbari
148:Abu'l-Fath ibn Abu'l-Fawaris
110:
7:
411:Al-manāmāt al-mar'īya li'l-
10:
849:
371:Sharḥ al-Khiraqī fī'l-fiqh
449:Aṣḥāb al-a'imma al-khamsa
317:Dictionary of Learned Men
221:, and the hadith scholar
72:
64:
56:
40:
28:
21:
793:11th-century biographers
745:Makdisi, George (1956).
555:
522:
507:Al-mafṣūl fī kitāb allāh
487:Akhbār al-Qāḍī Abū Ya'lā
297:
238:Abu Bakr ibn Abd al-Baqi
172:Abu Tahir ibn al-Ghubari
170:, or jurisprudence, was
160:Abu'l-Husayn ibn Bishran
68:Author, Scholar, Diarist
204:Abu Abdallah ibn Jarada
166:. His first teacher in
164:Abu'l-Qasim ibn Bishran
534:Diya ad-Din al-Maqdisi
492:Sharaf aṣḥāb al-ḥadīth
292:Abu Muhammad at-Tamimi
136:Abu'l-Hasan al-Hammami
482:Manāqib al-Īmām Aḥmad
462:Mashyakhat shuyūkhihī
215:Abu'l-Izz al-Qalanisi
128:al-Khatib al-Baghdadi
818:11th-century jurists
808:11th century in Iraq
386:Al-khiṣāl wa'l-aqsām
211:Abu Abdallah al-Bari
176:Abu Ishaq al-Shirazi
174:, a close friend of
85:Abu Ali ibn al-Banna
60:Abu Ali ibn al-Banna
823:People from Baghdad
355:and in Ibn Rajab's
219:Abu Bakr al-Mazrafi
158:, and the brothers
152:Abu'l-Fadl at-Tamim
44:11 January 1079 (5
464:(a copy is at the
444:Ṭabaqāt al-fuqahā'
376:Al-kāmil fī'l-fiqh
573:diacritical marks
82:
81:
77:Later Abbasid era
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466:Zahiriya Library
57:Other names
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472:Faḍā'il sha'bān
312:Yaqut al-Hamawi
300:
266:(aka Ibn Sufan)
140:Hilal al-Haffar
113:
95:. According to
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833:Iraqi diarists
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144:Ibn Rizqawayh
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130:. He studied
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107:legal guild.
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65:Occupation(s)
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32:c. 1005 (396
31:
27:
20:
759:. Retrieved
754:
750:
564:
548:surrounding
546:
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468:in Damascus)
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304:Ibn al-Jawzi
301:
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227:
208:
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125:
114:
88:
87:, full name
84:
83:
788:1079 deaths
783:1005 births
196:Abu'l-Faraj
777:Categories
583:References
413:Īmām Aḥmad
353:Dictionary
223:al-Humaydi
757:(1): 9–31
455:At-tārīkh
345:philology
322:Ibn Rajab
111:Biography
828:Hanbalis
761:31 March
550:Ibn Aqil
349:pedagogy
332:Muntazam
308:Muntazam
192:al-Qa'im
188:al-Qadir
105:Hanbali
93:Baghdad
217:, and
134:under
132:hadith
48:, 471
556:Notes
523:Diary
364:Dhail
357:Dhail
327:Dhail
298:Works
288:Rajab
46:Rajab
763:2022
538:waqf
341:fiqh
310:and
190:and
168:fiqh
162:and
41:Died
29:Born
324:'s
314:'s
306:'s
73:Era
779::
755:18
753:.
749:.
591:^
366::
359:.
347:,
339:,
213:,
198:.
154:,
150:,
146:,
142:,
117:AH
50:AH
34:AH
765:.
52:)
36:)
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